Annual Meeting of the Association 



323 



Leon J. Cole, University of Wiscon- 

 sin, will describe some of the experi- 

 mental breeding done there to deter- 

 mine the facts of inheritance in pigeons. 



G. N. Collins and J. H. Kempton of 

 the Bureau of Plant Industry will 

 describe crosses of Tripsacum and Euch- 

 laena, two grasses, which may throw light 

 on the ancestry of cultivated maize. 



B. O. Cowan, Santa Monica, Cali- 

 fornia, "Inbreeding." 



R. A. Emerson, Cornell University, 

 "Genetic Correlation between Plant 

 Colors and Aleurone and Endosperm 

 Colors in Corn." 



Albert F. Etter, Briceland, CaH- 

 fornia, will describe his methods of 

 strawberry breeding. Professor Roy 

 E. Clausen of the University of Cali- 

 fornia will show lantern slides of the 

 subject. 



Irving Fisher, professor of economics 

 at Yale University, has promised to 

 speak on the relation between eugenics 

 and sociology. 



A. C. Eraser, Cornell University, 

 "Hereditv in Phaseolus." 



E. F. Gaines, Pullman, Wash., "The 

 Inheritance of Qualitative Factors in 

 Small Grains;" results obtained at the 

 Washington State Experiment Station. 



Alexander Galbraith, DeKalb, 111., 

 "Inbreeding," a description of his ex- 

 perience with Clydesdale horses and 

 other stock. 



R. Ruggles Gates, University of 

 London, "On Successive Duplicate Mu- 

 tations" and "The Modification of 

 Characters by Crossing." 



A. W. Gilbert, Cornell University, 

 "Color Inheritance in Phlox drum- 

 mondiy 



Frank M. Harding, secretary Ameri- 

 can Shorthorn Breeders Association, 

 Chicago, 111., "Inbreeding." 



H. Hayward, Delaware Experi- 

 ment Station, "Inbreeding." 



A. C. Hottes, Cornell University, 

 "Multiple Hybrids, with Special Refer- 

 ence to the Genus Gladiolus." 



David Starr Jordan, Chancellor of 

 Leland Stanford Junior University, 

 "The Long Cost of War." 



Wilhelmina E. Key, Hartland, Wis., 

 "Creating a Eugenic Conscience." 



H. E. Knowlton, Cornell University, 



"Studies in Pollen Germination." 



Samuel C. Kohs, House of Correction, 

 Chicago, 111., "Eugenics and the Un- 

 conscious." 



Isabel McCracken, Stanford Univer- 

 sity, "Notes on Silkworm Heredity, 

 with Special Reference to theMoricaud 

 Race." 



C. L. Redfield, Chicago, 111., "Dynamic 

 Evolution." 



G. P. Rixford, Bureau of Plant 

 Industry, San Francisco, Cal., "The 

 Pistacio Nut in the Southwest and 

 Some Morphological Features in the 

 Development of the Embryo." 



A. J. Rosanoff, Kings Park State 

 Hospital, Long Island, N. Y., "Pre- 

 liminary Report of a Study of the 

 Offspring of the Insane." 



A. D. Shamel, Bureau of Plant 

 Industry, Riverside, Cal., "Problems 

 of the Navel Orange." 



R. R. Slocum, Bureau of Animal 

 Industry, Washington, D. C, "Poultry 

 Breeding;" illustrated with motion 

 pictures. 



W. B. Swift, Boston State Hospital, 

 Boston, Mass., "The Possibilities of 

 Voice Inheritance." 



W. T. Swingle, Bureau of Plant 

 Industry, Washington, D. C, "Plant 

 Breeding in Japan." 



Ethel H. Thayer, Mendocino State 

 Hospital, Talmage, Cal., "Cacogenic 

 Problems in California." 



C. C. Thomas, Cornell University, 

 "Preliminary Observations on Varia- 

 tions in Trillium grandiflorum and 

 Podophyllum peltatum. 



E. N. Went worth, Kansas State 

 Agricultural College, Manhattan, Kans., 

 "Sex-limited Inheritance." 



G. L. Tundel, Cornell University, 

 "Evolution of Celery" and "Disease 

 Resistance in Celery." 



The Surgeon General, U. S. Public 

 Health Service, has promised to detail 

 one of his assistants to speak on immi- 

 gration through the port of San Fran- 

 cisco, as it bears on eugenics. 



Several motion picture films will be 

 shown, including one illustrating the 

 horse breeding work of the U. S. Depart- 

 ment of Agriculture. 



A number of the papers will be 

 illustrated with the stereopticon. 



